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Siegen Hauptbahnhof is the main station of the town of
Siegen Siegen () is a List of cities and towns in Germany, city in Germany, in the south Westphalian part of North Rhine-Westphalia. It is located in the district of Siegen-Wittgenstein in the Arnsberg (region), Arnsberg region. The university town (n ...
, in the German state of
North Rhine-Westphalia North Rhine-Westphalia or North-Rhine/Westphalia, commonly shortened to NRW, is a States of Germany, state () in Old states of Germany, Western Germany. With more than 18 million inhabitants, it is the List of German states by population, most ...
. It is in close to the modern centre of Siegen, which includes the bus station and the Sieg Carré and City Galerie shopping centres.


History

The station was opened on 10 January 1861 at the same time as the branch line from Siegen to Betzdorf, which is now part of the
Sieg Railway The Sieg Railway ( is a long, electrified Rail transport in Germany, German main line railway between Köln Messe/Deutz station, Cologne-Deutz via Porz (Rhein) station, Porz, Troisdorf railway station, Troisdorf, Siegburg/Bonn station, Siegburg, ...
. The south-western part of the site, the railway depot in the preserved buildings and the tracks that are numbered from 50 were the terminus of the Cologne-Mindener Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft (CME), which was responsible for the construction of the line, but was taken over by the
Prussia Prussia (; ; Old Prussian: ''Prūsija'') was a Germans, German state centred on the North European Plain that originated from the 1525 secularization of the Prussia (region), Prussian part of the State of the Teutonic Order. For centuries, ...
n state in 1880. The freight yard opposite the depot was built over by the ECE Group with the City-Galerie at the end of the 1990s. The section from Altena to Siegen of the
Ruhr–Sieg railway The Ruhr–Sieg railway is a 106 km long double-track, electrified main line from Hagen Central Station, Hagen to Siegen station, Siegen via Iserlohn-Letmathe, Finnentrop station, Finnentrop and Kreuztal station, Kreuztal in the German state ...
was opened in the same year, on 6 August 1861, so the
Bergisch-Märkische Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft The Bergisch-Markisch Railway Company (, BME), also referred to as the Berg-Mark Railway Company or, more rarely, as the Bergisch-Markische Railway Company, was a Rail transport in Germany, German railway company that together with the Cologne-Mi ...
used the north-eastern part of the station with the tracks now numbered from number 1 as its terminus. After being nationalised in 1882, its facilities for the maintenance of rolling stock became a repair shop, which were later demolished and replaced by highway B54, locally called Hüttentalstraße. In this context, no separate track was provided to the former main post office, since letter centre 57 had been relocated to the
autobahn The (; German , ) is the federal controlled-access highway system in Germany. The official term is (abbreviated ''BAB''), which translates as 'federal motorway'. The literal meaning of the word is 'Federal Auto(mobile) Track'. Much of t ...
. The founding of the ''Eisern-Siegener Eisenbahn'' (now part of the "Siegen-Wittgenstein district railway") and the connection of its central Eintracht station to the Siegen freight yard was a state initiative, which participated from the outset, as a result of which track 52 was used as a transfer track without an overhead line until it was renovated around 2020. It was not until 1 December 1915 that the
Dill Railway The Dill Railway (German: ''Dillstrecke'') is a 73 km-long double-track electrified railway line, which runs from Gießen in Hesse to Siegen in North Rhine-Westphalia. The line is mainly worked by regional trains, including diesel multiples ...
was extended, giving a direct rail connection to (and thus Frankfurt), because its construction had previously been considered too difficult, not militarily urgent and could not be financed. The newly added parts of the
triangular junction In railroad structures and rail terminology, a wye (like the'' 'Y' ''glyph) or triangular junction (often shortened to just triangle) is a triangular joining arrangement of three rail lines with a railroad switch (set of points) at each corner ...
for this are the two tunnels under Siegener Giersberg with the end points of Siegen-Weidenau and Siegen Ost, of which only the former has two tracks, because the Cologne–Giessen connection via the
Betzdorf–Haiger railway The Betzdorf–Haiger railway, also known in German as the Hellertalbahn (Heller Valley Railway), is a 36 kilometre long, single-track main line from Betzdorf, Germany, Betzdorf to Haiger. The end points of the line are in the States of Germany, G ...
had already been built. The connection to the single-track Giersberg tunnel, involved the construction of the railway embankment for the Ruhr–Sieg railway, so that both lines would pass over bridges over both Hagener Straße and Sieghütter Hauptweg, where the level crossing with the ''Siegener Kreisbahn'' tramway was already problematic. Between 1942 and 1944, during the Nazi period, people, most of whom were Jewish, were deported from Siegen station to concentration camps. A commemorative plaque on platform 4 is a reminder of this on the initiative of the ''Aktiven Museums Südwestfalen''. As a railway junction in a centre of iron production, steel production, tool manufacturing and mechanical engineering, the Siegen junction and railway infrastructure was an important strategic target of the Allied bombing raids, especially on 16 December 1944 and until March 1945, during which 90 percent of the city, many tracks, but not the entrance buildings, were destroyed. This became a central argument for their preservation. With the division of Germany in 1945, only the traffic flows in the north-south direction continued to develop, which led to the Hagen–Giessen axis, including Siegen station, being electrified in 1965, but the Sieg Railway did not follow until 1980 and the Betzdorf–Haiger railway was no longer considered important and in fact one track was dismantled. In 1968 and 1980, respectively, the A45 and the A4 motorways created much faster long-distance connections, and the railways also upgraded their lines in such a way that even before the Cologne–Frankfurt high-speed line was built, a journey from the Ruhr area to Frankfurt via Cologne and Mainz was just as fast as via Weidenau. In order to avoid the time-consuming reversal at Siegen station required for trains between Giessen and the Ruhr, Weidenau became the stop in Siegen for express trains and later
InterRegio The InterRegio, often shortened to IR, is a train categories in Europe, train category for mainly domestic train services in use in some European countries, with Swiss Federal Railways operating the most dense network. InterRegio trains are semi ...
service 22. Between the sidings on Heeserstraße and the main post office, a central "Sp Dr S600" signal box was built in the 1980s for the triangular junction and sections of track up to and including Geisweid, Brachbach and Rudersdorf stations. With the introduction of the integrated clock-face timetable, which provides for the meeting of the Regional-Express trains from the three directions in Siegen on the hour, the single-track Giersberg tunnel has proved to be a bottleneck, because the trains towards Gießen and Frankfurt are often delayed in the double-track area behind the Siegen East freight yard, causing knock-on delays to other trains.


Services

The station has six platform tracks, of which number 1 (connecting track in the direction of Hagen/Giessen) and 2 are on the main platform. The other four tracks, two of which are dead-end tracks, are on the central platform, two each offset on each side of the platform, so that the two sections of the platform in each direction reflect the original terminal stations: tracks 3 and 4 towards Hagen/Giessen and tracks 54 and 55 towards Cologne. The platform height has been 76 centimetres since 2018. The maximum platform lengths vary between 150 and 353 metres. In 2020, new entry signals among other things were installed. As a result, it is now possible, for example, for the RE9 from Cologne to run to track 54 at 60 km/h instead of 30 km/h and only then reduce speed at the platform. The same applies to trains from the Ruhr area and Münster when entering platform 4. Since the beginning of June 2015, the station's rail infrastructure has been comprehensively modernised for €11.4 million. The completion of the modernisation measures ("modernisation offensive MOF 2") was expected by the end of 2024. So far, in addition to the renewed platforms, the station has received a new pedestrian overpass and lifts (in operation since the end of February 2019), which enable barrier-free access both to the platforms themselves and to Freudenberger Straße. In addition, the platforms received new roofing and modern lighting and loudspeaker systems. In October 2020, the underpass was usable again after the completion of the modernisation. Work is underway on a new roof for the main platform so that passengers can walk from the station concourse to the platforms with dry feet. The entrance building from 1861 is also to be modernised after the MOF is completed. The demolition of the old station building and construction of a new building, which was repeatedly planned by an investor, is not being pursued further after public opposition. Deutsche Bahn is now planning to rebuild the building while retaining the old structure. Local interest groups are also demanding that it be heritage listed. The Siegen station is a transport node and connects with the Siegen bus network.


Regional services

The following regional services served the station in 2025:


Long distance services

Since 12 December 2021, IC line 34 has served Siegen with double-decker carriages. Eight pairs of trains run on the Münster – Hamm – Dortmund / Unna – Siegen – Frankfurt route, of which two pairs are accelerated between Siegen and Hamm and enable a direct connection to ICE line 10 in Hamm towards Hanover and Berlin. One of the faster pairs of trains goes beyond Münster to . The remaining six have a lower cruising speed and run from Letmathe past Hagen to Dortmund or via Dortmund to Münster. These trains can be used with local transport tickets between Dortmund and Dillenburg, operating as the RE 34.


Other facilities

In the station there is a DB travel centre, a
McDonald's McDonald's Corporation, doing business as McDonald's, is an American Multinational corporation, multinational fast food chain store, chain. As of 2024, it is the second largest by number of locations in the world, behind only the Chinese ch ...
, a restaurant and a newsstand.


Inconsistencies in the naming of the station

The Siegen station was not called a
Hauptbahnhof Central stations or central railway stations emerged in the second half of the nineteenth century as railway stations that had initially been built on the edge of city centres were enveloped by urban expansion and became an integral part of the ...
(central station) by
Deutsche Bahn (, ; abbreviated as DB or DB AG ) is the national railway company of Germany, and a state-owned enterprise under the control of the German government. Headquartered in the Bahntower in Berlin, it is a joint-stock company ( AG). DB was fou ...
until 2017. Nevertheless, the term Siegen Hauptbahnhof was used at some signs at the station, on road maps and in on-train announcements. The station was officially renamed to Siegen Hauptbahnhof after the completion of the refurbishment works in December 2017.


Notes


References

*


External links

* {{cite web, url=http://www.deutschebahn.com/site/bahn/de/geschaefte/infrastruktur__schiene/netz/netzzugang/dokumente/Bahnhof/SNB/E/ESIE__NBS.pdf , title= Track plan of Siegen station , publisher=
Deutsche Bahn (, ; abbreviated as DB or DB AG ) is the national railway company of Germany, and a state-owned enterprise under the control of the German government. Headquartered in the Bahntower in Berlin, it is a joint-stock company ( AG). DB was fou ...
, accessdate=9 February 2011 , language=German Railway stations in North Rhine-Westphalia Siegen Buildings and structures in Siegen-Wittgenstein Railway stations in Germany opened in 1861 1861 establishments in Prussia